Although the 5.7M SibLim thread is the apt one for my following suggestions, there could be some value WRT the 7M version... where building is done in the way of filleting, glass taping, and also epoxy painting the interior, whilst still in the early stages of exterior sheeting.
It should work out to be flipping modules, so that access is possible to all corners, while standing with feet on the workshop floor.
At 2M beam, 1/2 beam distance is reachable(with my average length arm as a distance quage), and when one or other of the halves is theoretically flipped to face inside upwards.
Joining the halves on the centreline, should make the flat workshop floor a convenient flat building bed, on which to lay the bulkheads and frames-- with the CL horizontal and the waterline vertical.
The topside planking/strake, is bent over and onto(the bulkhead frame structure), as the first sheeting step, with the chine and the deck/sheer lines being the guides to a fair lay of the panels.....perhaps I do not fully appreciate the details of pre-cut panel construction, but surely accurately cut panels wired together along their edges, should produce a fair curve?
Stringers and battens strategically placed between the chine will then help to support a fair assembly.
I would like to see a template panel of the arched deck, used as an assembly aid, and possibly with a small log on the inside edge of this deck template/panel. This, as well as the chine, should create the coreect and fair shape shape?.
Surely a chine log would not be needed, and double bias taping inside and out would be all that is needed, to create a stiff enough hull piece, that can flipped over for working the inside?